Well-Known Member

None raw for me. A long time ago a friend and I went diving in St Georges creek and once we sat on the bottom and the silt cleared could harvest a bushel within an arms length. My friend once spat out his regulator and sucked an oyster from it's shell while on the bottom with a big grin... good times ! Not any more the oysters are all dead from disease.

God bless the USA

None raw for me. A long time ago a friend and I went diving in St Georges creek and once we sat on the bottom and the silt cleared could harvest a bushel within an arms length. My friend once spat out his regulator and sucked an oyster from it's shell while on the bottom with a big grin... good times ! Not any more the oysters are all dead from disease.

#*! boat!

None raw for me. A long time ago a friend and I went diving in St Georges creek and once we sat on the bottom and the silt cleared could harvest a bushel within an arms length. My friend once spat out his regulator and sucked an oyster from it's shell while on the bottom with a big grin... good times ! Not any more the oysters are all dead from disease.

That would be awesome, as a young man my dad would take me diving for oysters each winter on the Choptank and Magothy..
How great it would be to walk again in grass along shores the of the bay and tributaries for softshells with a dipnet.

#*! boat!

That would be awesome, as a young man my dad would take me diving for oysters each winter on the Choptank and Magothy..
How great it would be to walk again in grass along shores the of the bay and tributaries for softshells with a dipnet.

That's all been coming back in the last decade. We regularly have a lot of grass and weed in our cove off St. George's Creek now...and along with that large schools of minnows, crabs, etc. And when we have one of those really low tides, I can just walk out on the mud bottom and pick up oysters...takes only minutes to fill a bucket.

Free America

That's all been coming back in the last decade. We regularly have a lot of grass and weed in our cove off St. George's Creek now...and along with that large schools of minnows, crabs, etc. And when we have one of those really low tides, I can just walk out on the mud bottom and pick up oysters...takes only minutes to fill a bucket.